THE GUARDIANl Pubiuhoa every weekday morning I! 116 Prim-2 strut. uiui lottetnwn. P. F: I. by tho Thomson Company Limited. -cuun rriuo Eduard ulna us: In now" i Editor And Munur. llb A. lurutt. l Auocllto Editor. Frank Wain: , lrrm-ti umru It summi-nude. Mnniuue ma Aibenmi Auitm ized as Second Cllll Mail by the Post Office Department. l Otlavu. lly Carrier: rnariattctmvn, Summerndc U500 per annum Rise Ihere in P. l 8900. other Province: And U S A I11 ill, Du Innum. 4 "Tbs strongest memory is weaker thus the weaken Ink." iiioR7nTi-. xov. -isfissc Report on Housing lion and costs. family formation and birth of second children are discussed in the monthly review of the Bank of Nova Scotia. The general impression is that, like ihc Whitc Queen. we must run faster and faster in order to stay in the same place. The pamphlet is headed, "The Revived Boom in llousing,” because the pace of ill- vcstmcnt and building lagged in 1951 and lfi.'i'2 wlicn costs went up l'3lh9l' nlarkedh anrl in.siir:iiicc companies -iad iii('i0aS9d lhl iircyporiiriii (ll illftili in lllollgagl-N from 1'2 per cent to 30 per cent and were rpady to call a halt. l.ci:i::laiioii has proviricd for a nob suiircc of mortgage funds. ill? fillillilelietl hanks, Jillfl enabled iionic liuiiders to prom cccd with a relatively smaller down pay- ninnt. Thc effect has been immediate. For, mp fir.-1 niiic months the number of dwel- lings financed has been 30 per cent higher than last year. Seven years ago a shortage W35 at "V most acute stage. Now, with some 600,000 !llt)i'f' lioiiscs available. the shortage is still scverc in many metropolitan areas. though fll many parts of the country, especially in the smallcr towns, the situation is it good rival misicr. Faniily forinatioii has been at a hifzll rate and. equally important from a hous- ing point of view, a second child has been. born relatively quickly to many parents Ry ill-ifl there was a pronounced increase- assets which has been carried further in subsc-3 qiicnt years. The result is a greater de-i mand for housing than mere numbers of the population would indicate. Secrecy In Atomic Matters 'lllivrc has been a widespread belief in lvcstcrii i-ountrics that Russian espionage in thc ifnitcd States had mucii to do with the rapidity with which Soviet scientists were able to produce nuclear weapons. Thcrc is no doubt that :1 good deal of spy- ing has bcmi goiiig on; but, in ti.e opinion. of Dr. James Bcckerly, an official of thcl I'nitcd Slates Atomic Energy Commission. its importancc has been much exaggerated. "We can only surmise", said Dr. Beckcri) in an n(ldi'(lSS before a scientific society. ”why the ll. S. S. R. became armed sop soon; but pcrsonally I believe it was primar-: ily tliroiigli the efforts of Soviet scientists and cniziiiccrs backed by a ruthless total- itarian rcsrilvc to dominate the world that thc 1'. S. S. R. became iirmed with fission weapons as early as 1949." "We must slog? kidding oursclvcs," he continued, "that we, jilgi natiii-ally hotter than the Soviets in, arc technical matters. the plants to make fissionable materials and bombs." , llr. Pm kcrly did not suggest tl'...t secrecy in atomic energy matters is of no value in Western efforts to kccp ahead in that field ; It still is possible that the West has somci avlvniiccri techniques which the Russians l1l"lx'. in that rasc, such secrecy as is pos- giliin might hclp very considerably in keep- in: Riissia from gcitiiic the upper hand? but to depend on it as a sort of atomic ”.lia(:inol line" or oven to allow it to have any iiifliicncc whatsoever in policy makiiigl woiilrl bc not only unwise but vciy danger- I l (HIS. l Printing Anniversaries Science. is putting wnrrls and pictures on paper in new ways. thereby writing the future of the ancient art of printing.l liicctroiiic and photographic typescttinitl macliincs spin oiil printed matter at fan- tastic spccds. Rooks travel by wire. Lighil beams reproduce color pictures. ink jumps from press to paper by electricity. Mean-,i whilc. thc National Geographic Society says. historians of printing are celebrating, two anniversaries. Five hundred years ago.,l sometime between 1454 and .1456, Johnj Gutenberg printed his first Bible at Mainz., Germany. In ancient China, one thousand) and one years ago. printers finished repro- ducing all 130 volumes of the Confucianl classics. l Dr. 'ai1ncvar Bush, president of 1hr (7arncgic Institution of Washington, has said he believes that movable metal type will by supplanted by new and faster printing methods. If so, it is really the end of an era. (1utcnbcrg's invention of separate metal type characters about 1436 is thr: very foundation of modem printing. Hei was not the only inventor, however. Blocl: irinting actually began some seven cen-I turles earlier in China. About 1041 a, genius named Pl Sheng conceived movable type made of fire-hardened clay. Movable metal type came later. Koreans were mak- ing it perhaps as early as 1232. , The first printed book still in existence. the British Museum's "The Diamond Sutra", was produced by the Chinese Wang Chieii in A.D. 868. Similar wood blocl: printing existed at least a century earlier. A few copies survive of a million printed Buddhist charm papers ordered in 770 by Japan's Empress Shotoku. fucian canon, so important to Chinese cul- tural history, took 21 years to complete. It was authorized in 932 and finished in Th? UPS mid d0W”5 of h0u5l”-3 C0”5”'”C' 953. Each page was hand cut on a separ-i ate block of wood. character by character Playing cards, religious pictures, and paper money brought printing to Europe from China. The movement from Asia to Europe was slowed because of the early Islamic belief that printing was evil. I' took Genghis Khan to break the barrier. Spain and Germany wer-sprinting playing cards by 1377. Gutenberg's inspiration of separate type blocks for each letter was at genuine independent invention, despite thcj fact that bronze type was being cast to royal order in Korea at lcast 30 years be-, fore. The first printing press in Heniisplicre worked in Mexico City in 133:). EDITORIAL NOTES The operation of an extra carferry by time both reflects thcl the C.-YR. at this high rate of freight shipments also and serves to further stimulate the Island econ- omy by speeding up the service. 0 O O The bequest of the widow of Dr. S. N Robertson for two scholarships at Prince- of Wales College where her husband was so long principal is itself a fine memorial to that teacher. It should, however, be mere- ly the nucleus of a greater fund bolstered by the contributions of former students. 0 I 0 An exhibition of 85 British books chos- en for the National Book League as the in the number of second children. a treiidwinest design and production published dmw is now on tour of 16 Ontario towns and cities. Arrangements for the tour have been made by the Canadian Library Association on behalf of the Brit- ish Council. mg 1953, The housing problem for some Canadian students in Scotland may be solved by liv- ing in a castle. The 16th Earl of Dalhousic, at any rate, told the Canadian graduate; that he is thinking of letting ror.ms in his castle near F.dinburgh. ”maybc to some studcnts from Daihousie." O Aircraft from Summerside and Green- wood are carrying out anti-submarine exer- lcises with the first Caiiadian-niziiincd sub- marine aiid a U. S. submarine off Ber- muda. Canada has had some few submar- iners serving with the Royal Navy. Likel their opposite numbers in thc R N. they insist iii the mailer of pronounciation, on being mariners with the prefix sub I In accordance with the Queen's ivish, Canadian insignia will in future bear the They have the skills ancili'epi'cseiitaIion of St. Edward's crown rath- ms and dances, conch tw...i...-,- ier than the Tudor crown the use of which teams "d was introduced by King Edward VII. They are generally similar but the Tudor crown rises to a higher peak. Neither of the orig- inals now exist but it is probable that the design now approved is closer to ancient modcls. English surveyors Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon commenced this date 1763 to survey the boundary between Maryland and Pennsylvania, finally putting an end to the disputes between the Baltiinores and Perms who owned them respectively. This line and an extension of it was the bound- ary between slave and free states and pop iilarly is considered to separate north and south. V I C A farm survey in Newfoundland cover- ing 247 farms in 12 areas found that cash farm receipts for .1953 averaged 533,660. Re- ceipts ranged from 3394 for the smallest farms to 587,730 for the largest. The aver- age net farm cash income was .il1,240-iii addition, the farms supplied 34570 in pro- ducts for the family, and there was a non- farm income of 0360. Farm size varied rom five acres to 127 acres, and averaged 58 acres for all farms. Capital investment required averaged M1500, and ranged from 320,500 to M1300. O a Canadian cattle numbers on December 1. 1953. had reached 9,371,000 which 'com- pared with 8.906,300 the year before. The eastern provinces had 5,376,000 and the western provinces 3,995,000. Milk cows in- creased seven per cent in the East and only two per cent in the West. Alberta has more beef cows than any other prov- ince-528,000 as compared with 388,000 for all of eastern Canada. Ontario, however, has 200,000 yearling beef heifers as com- pared with l57,000 in Alberta. Printing of the Con-- I the Wcslcrnl l W Ce gone piovlcftixe of t l t l i I i him; in a.ri-a,pron;'.1 PUBLIC FORUM- Tlill column In opal! It III lineup- llnn by rurreilpbnllellll ul uuellloiu all at. The Grurdllu don: uol rly union. in opinion of pondouln. "PROGRESSIVE EDFCATION" S'ir,- The the school l l next group in niak-: its operational ha.u' will in all likcliness be tlirz Ioii sorial fraternity. It would not bi. such a far cry from pupils taking time out far cod lncr oil cap- sulcs, or a dental checkup, in get- ting a haircut during school, hours. i instead of urging teachers (0 -do hctter in developing ability in lthink and create through specific larudcrnic disciplines, the pontiff: of "Progressive, Education" nr advocating their combining tin nldcr functions of the school witri ptlic cducativc duties of the home. ,the church, the family doctor, and lumptcen social agencies. Thus; they call "relating thr- .what whole child in the whole of life By the lllliP tcachcrs get ihrou,-.': with the r-riucrilionai sivlc-shown thrust on them by professional theorists, their stamina is tA'Dl) nigh spent. land the Thrre R's rc- maln ii sadly overlooked trio. i' Ith- is nonsensical to ask them icgiclicisl to act as prrccptors. fa fliers and niolhrrs. niinistrrs of iyligion, skilled miinsrjlois, lid n- rd nurses and psychiatrists. all rolled into one. In it any wonder then that an American high school teach.-r wrotr: to Cannon Bc,rr.aril lddin,E Ilcli: "What do we ti-at-h'.' Sari!-i It-riiigs of almost llll things, :i'i- tlcmic nnd oihcrwlsc. Tlicsc w.'- lry to 'lliLFgrHlC around vital cen- itrni interests such as how to irlnlr, how to reform the City llxill. and run the l'iiitcd Nntio how in pliin c'iirs, how to proyirl. ' adequate lioii.-inz, how in solv. leconomic problems. All this when the pupils are fifteen years old! "We try to entice pupil in'.cr- est: and we do it with 'pupiI ari- vicI:'; We must assist in extin- currirular activities; rhapcron DIS: dramatic clubs. W.- must amuse the. young not only in school but after school too, M) ,that they may be distracted from lsmnking txrrli-rs'; from jiivciiiic delinquency in general. Oh yes. lvrc are supposed to visit ttii: homes of our pupils. to study their social backgrounds. and act pas personal advisers, helping all of them to find themselves as be- ginning adults.' Ours is the life, of Reilly. We labor more and nmicl rxhauslingly And do nniliingrc.1'.-' ly well." Some will argue that our Iii- lnnd schools are not tainted with prngresslvisrn. Colllcr's writer- llnwnrd Wiiiim:in- says: "Very ifcw schools have taken on Pro- igrcsslvn Etltlflfllicin whole ho; But almost none has escaped ii..: llnflucnrr." One of the tenets of the new system is the elimination of competition. And Island rol- ,iimnists and srhnolrnrii have open- ,l.i' advoratrd the introduction of pthat radical change into tho. schools nf this Province. "ShiI'l iwc have cooperation or competi- tion in our schools?" l Progressive Educatiomaccordlaz to J. R. Watilirws, "rt-pres;-nig. lnirllcrtiial and moral anarchy," The tendency in burdrn tho school with the ”tniai education" of the. child. to the exclusion 0' all other eriucaiivr media .ii lsymptnmatlc of the progrresivi virus. I am. sir, etc. W'. .l ENR lGllT lCharlottetown. ROCKY POINT PERBVSERVICE sir,-A West River writer. who tinesn'l like political promises, sug- gests in in recent letter to The Guardian, on alternative to the proposed West. River bridge- nsmely I powerful ice-resisting ferry-boat. at Rocky Point. designed for all sorts of heavy traffic. and practically all-year-round service. The suggestion is valuable. for the very reason that it. brings into clear and bold relief the one and only ol- lernativc that could possibly be siiggeslcd in lieu of the bridge pro- yet, i This ferrv-boat proposition it , first glance iii liable to have an ap- iprsil in is certain number of West lRn-er residents. espectnlkv to those ll The Age Old Story Thou art near, 0 Lord; and all ,thy commandment: are truth . . . .. Thy word is true from the be- ginning: and every one of thy righteous judgments endureth for ever. by this time. Rocky Point residents have had their fill of ice-breaking, ice-breakable. off again, on again fcrrirs. To try one more. would surely be a remarkable example of the l-l'illlHpi1 of hope over c.xDI?Fl- ' CIICG. Of course, howevrr, I quite agree with those who claim that Rocky Point should have some kind of frrry service-but only for the sum.- nirr season. I quite agree. too, with those who claim that Rocky Point should continue to be as it. has been for several generations, H pleasant summer resort. for Charlottetown people; but surely in this respect Charlottetown people-men, wom- en. and children-ivould be more intcr s'rri in a plr-asaiitly-dc.si0.iied passer boat. rather than a costly icc-brrakiug ferry-boat designed for all sorts of heavy traffic and all-ycar-round service. Let Rocky Point people, for the time being. crasc spcciilnting on any kind of fci'nv-sri'vi."c. now tha: thry are assiircd of it safe and easy all-year-rouriri pzissagc by a budge across West River. lo be located at a point that will leave them situat- ed as near to it as scores of their fellow citizens will be. who live fiom 3 to 6 and cven 10 miles west of the bridge. and who now rejoice in the prospect. of it. After they have secured this just and equal right. let them then seek. at their leisure. for fcrry boats, and sum- ;n:c': resorts for Charlottetown pco-i ' pic, and in flirt any oilirr liixuryi that, they and thrir fellow ftlll'I.CllS4 of Chairlotteloivii and cisi-ulierc may feel disposed to pay for. In the meantime. the best of luck to old Rocky Pnlnt. and. On with the iiilrlgc for West. Riycrl I am. Sir. c'c. M. Mcii Argyle Shore. Nov 13th. MR. PRATT AND TTIE TVEST Sir.- I have read with much interest. in The Giirirdmn of Nov. 5th 8 letter signed by Mr. C. C. Pratt, of St. Peters. On the basis of ii magazine article. Mr. Prnii. attempts to outline condi- tions in the wheat growing sec- tion of Western Canada. He men- tions his trip to the West in 1012. and his working as straw boss on an outfit threshing and handling a fifty bushel crop. when Wheat. deal- ers and speculators had A free hand to transact business and pro- sperity existed on every hand in the Canadian West. Today. he says, "The West is in ii. complete state of destruction. with three years wheat. on tho fnrmcrs' hands, elevators bulging their sides, grariaries filled to the roofs"; they are in such a mess he says that the farmer is in despair, his nest. egg in the bank is used up if he had any. lll.I credit at the stores and banks ex- hausted. and he is smothered with his own wheat in a world that is starving. due to the conditions ex- lstlng under the management. '0! the Western Whcnt Board which are definitely and dcmonstxntivcly the worst one could conjure in his wildest fantasy." I do not tinder- stand what. he means in this last sentence. but no doubt it. is in- tended to be devastating. Now I formed in those years Mr. Pratt speaks about.-those year! of wheat dealers and spcciilawrii. when the farmer who was well established with his own machin- ery, threshing outfit and all neces- sary equipment was able to have his crop seeded in the early spring, get awiiy to an early shirt at threshing time. place his wheat. on the early market. and receive from 81.25 to 81.80 per bushel. The homesieader, as 1 was, would have to leave his wheat in siook for weeks at l time. until the threshing outfit with Mr. Pratt. as straw boss would cventuiilly make its way to our farm about Novem- ber UL, and after brushing the snow off the stocks we would fin- nlly complete our season's thresh- lniz. By the time we would get. our wheat. to the elevator. the price had dwindled and all that was left of 81.00 was 80 pts. The grain who reside at. or nsgr Rocky Point the more iinsntlsfnctory and undr- sirnblo. it. will appear. For surely Riit the more closely it is txamini.-d., dealers got. the 81.00 and the far- mrr not the balance. I Quite ii contrast from today lniiere the farmers receive an equal Old Charlottetown and P.lL From The Examiner, Dec. a, 1882: Mr. Justice Peters gave judgment. today on the question raised by cert.-iin shareholders of the Bank kof Prince Edward Island, who ob- ijocted to being placed upon the list of contributories for a greater sum than 564.44 per share. He decided that in call of W0 per share be made upon the directors of the Bank, and reserved further judg- .menl. as to the liability of the share. lholders. Mr. Mcxinlay, well known street preacher. met. with 8 serious ac- cident this morning. While at the dry goods store of Mr. A. B. Mc- ,Kcnz:c he became engaged in argu- lment. On scoring a point he as usual turned upon his heel. but this time slipped, and fell and broke his ankle. He was given in charge of Dr. McKay. who set the limb immediately. Mr. McKinley is doing as well as can be expected under the c.rcumsiancc.s. l-RTE-Ca -TC-. ipl'lC8 early or late and the young farmer or liomcsteader has on rquril ch:incc with his more ma- iiurc neighbour. I Yes. the eleviitors in the west- Zlrc crammed, granarics are plug- ged: vacant schools, skating rinks. anything that has a roof over it and can be rented is plugged in capacity. Bumper crops this last ten 3(!fil'S, with modern high pow- crcd l1l.lClllIlCI'y, more land under Culiivaiioit, with more attention paid to seed and methods of cul- tiy:itloii. Western Canada is pro- duclni; wheat. as it never pro- (illCC(l before. The farmers of Wcstcrn Cuiiidn never lived in I more prosperous era then at the prfscnl. time. Come what. may they- have next year's crop all harvest. ed and ready to place on the mar- ket; the stores, wholesalers. hurd- nvrrc firms, banks and all business rsiriblisliments never knew of such business and prosperity: towns are springing up over night, cities growing faster then they can lay he streets. Take eglnn for example in 1912, wiitn Mr. Pratt paid us a vlirlt. Regina was just. a few houses on the banks of the Wascuna; today it is fast growing to be one of the most beautiful cities of Con- nda; its Parltunent Buildings. with the exception of Ottawa the most beautiful in Canada, with their lawns find parks covering twenty- five ncrcs; Victoria Avenue with its beiutifiii shade trees lining both sides of the streets, tno rows of Manitoba Maples up the oentire, with A beautiful drlvewsy on each side; homes of the very best. flanked by beautiful Victoria Park on the one side. and the C.P.l't. i hotel. the "Saskatchewan" which is fifteen stories high. on thel other; the Exhibition grounds co- vering ninety acres with Mr. Auld in boy from Covehead, P.E.I.) Is Siipci-lntendcnt; with its two has- pitals, the General and the Grey Nuns. as modern as any in Can- ada; new and commodlous schools, Churches of the best, I credit to their parishonera: a city that is clean and up-to-date in every res. Dcci rind of which every citizen is justly proud. All this WK-I ac- cnnmilsiied by the prosperity of the wheat grower of the wemm plains. Now I have never grown pota- toes, (glad of the fact that I never have) and therefore am not in E Dtxsitinn to argue pro or can on the subject of 1: Potato Mar- keting Board. But I do know that they require one thing. and thnt is adult education; if it. be neces- sary anywhere it is in potato areas. as A glance at the reports of the llrmel's' meetings held far the express purpose of studying the marketing situation plainly tn- dicstu. In conclusion I would invite Mr.'Prstt to visit Regina, tell us through this paper when he leaves St. Peters and I will meet. him at Union Station in Regina. He will be assured of a good time, and perhaps before his return his attitude will have changed and he will be able to speak in better word for the clmdtsn West. I am. Sir. etc. A RETIRED FARMER. Regina. Soak. NEWBPAPEII. HISTORY The first iron printing presses for newspapers were introduced in Canada about 1832. OTTAWA REPORT Ottawa: Emma athiiis has learned the hard way that in than days ”they'' are liable to compel everyone to conform to the humdrum uniformity of our human productdon line. "They" may pre- vent. any person from living placid- ly inn manner of his own choosing. minding his own business. and bothering nobody. By "they" of course, I mean the officials elected by us, or selec ed on our behalf, and paid by us, to manage our community, province or nation. Today all these, from senior executive to junior township clerk. have ceased to end their official letters with the ancient phrase: ”I am, dear Sir tor Madam). your humble and obedi- ent servant." Perhaps they hope that, without this reminder, John Q. Public will forget. who is boss. Little old Miss Emma Mathias was fortunate to afford to live in her family'.s spacious old house on a mature old avenue. The home which had been good enough for her grandparents and parents, and in which she had been brought up. seemed adequate and certainly happy for Emma and her sisterl Mollie in their last 11 years. Somcl of the rooms were no longer used and remained undusted; some old mahogany chairs had been cu- cased in protective wrappings: bicycles and other childhood souvenirs were stored safely away. Remembering disastrous bank fini- ures, and perhaps resenting banks" rising service charges, Miss Emma preferred to cache spending money in her home, rather than entrust it to some pi'ofc.ssLonal guirclian. . - . At. last this inoffensive partner- ship for living was broken up by Mollie! death. A little later. poor Miss Emma fell and broke her leg. Living alone with no rclzitives car- lllg for her, she had to go to hus- pltal. Immediately a niecc appeared on the scene, not to cure lovingly for her aunt. but to file an affidavit alleging that Miss Emma was in- competent to look after hcrsrli A judge ordered investigators tn ax- iimine Miss Ell'll'llf-1.5 home-in hcr absence and without her pcrmis-, sion. Their study, it. was said. re-l vealed "a picture of mid-Viclorianl living in a modern era." Apparently the adjective Victor- ian no longer implies a peaceful. prosperous and developing cxist-, ence, prlztng virtues of greatrr: worth than that of being able to buy I bigger television aerial than the Jonesls. The liivcstigzitors went llll'fIilfLll the home with x-ray iliornuy,-liiicss.l stripping the ivrappings off furnit- ure, ripping tires off the bicycles. tearing open mattresses, probiiig' into every drawer and closet. searching among bedding and clothing, and even riitiiiii: into upholstery. They discovered Mis.-"l Emma's hiding places for her money and boasted "Tim-r is not even ii penny that we have not found." Then this modrin Gcsiipn med-, ercd electric lights and runningi water to be lustalleci in the old home: ordered it to be redecorated and converted to staiidards which they considered essential for mod- em living. All at Miss Emma's ox- pense. When she returns from the hospltal, she will be startled to fulfil that "conveniences which she dis- dained" have been thrust upgi her, and that the "lnconvenlcigt rind, ,-.. . H... . no Giiardlu T... Iago! Gadgets Ordered By Law By Patrick Nicholson untldlnes.s" to which the was ac. customed have been altered. Her cash has been deposited in a bank. Note that there is no Duggeszion that her home was lnsnnitary or unfit for habitation; nor that me is mentally deranged. She Wu merely offending the robot outlook of officials by living today in the mid-Victorian siiyle in which shc had been brought up. All this happened, by judge's order, in a nearby country which boasts that its way of life is based upon vibe self-evident truth that all men are endowed by (mp- Crcater with certain inalienable rights, among which are life, lib. eriy and the pursuit. of happinwi ...ihese rights being secured by a government. which derives its just powers from the consent or the governed." Miss Emma is learning that our no longer humble and obedient public servants, in their growing grandmotherllness, now consider it unnecessary to obtain the con. sent of the governed Equally- iriihout. your knowledge and con. sent. but of course at. your expense, you too might. have disdained gad. gets thrust down your throat. Asa warning against the new greater lnicrference by government, Emmy. deserves a place in history besidg the Tolpuddic Martyrs. If ti" ii.1rr.iiig is bonded, she will not have been "convenlcnced" in Vain. we so -7oeZil'-a&?mez NIGHT PIECE FROM ATLANTIS be great Dogstsr dlms, I Before me i a bust Bears on the supine blue: tenscly I wait; The cvcniiigls cleft. by a small clsst sic tlirusli, l-for brave notes never early, never late. Now as I ycam an old faith iuneg my 'rai'. She siii-:5. wliitc-robcd in I whitu coloiiuade. Exquisite sum. of all I've longed to hear, Fulfillment of poor gestures I have inridc. was nor is, but sweetness flocks my lips, Tbcrcts fire at wanderer may call his own, My pi-ow but one among the co)- ored ships summoncd' lo moor slunlng stone. Then full to her bright head the ' loud waves rise, PM Dogstar blazes back into my eyes. Time at qusys of --Jnlui Ackerson, in the New York Times (llll.'RCH COUNCIL MEETING- KIIVGSTON (CP) -- Thg mu; meeting of the Canadian Council of Churches will be held at 5:, Gcurlzcs cathedral here Nov. 22-26. l-lithcrto the council has met an- nually. This will be its first bien- nial mcctiniz. An announcement Sillllfday from its general sec- ffllafy. Rcv. W. J. Gallagher or fomiiin. said the council's purpose 15 "10 Hive expression to the funds- nicntal unity of the Christian com- inunions and to provide a common Mcncy for projects of an inter- chiirch natiirc." FOR RENT: llllllltl You can borrow .f205.59 Repay in l5 monthly instalments of .fl6.00 each Ready for your immediate possession: 35010 81000 on your own signature, without bnnknble security. Lonns made to both married and single people. Easy-to-mccl rcquircmcnlii. Louns mmlc Io consoli- date hills-for fuel. rcpnirs-any good reason. Thousands olfsmilics every day "rent." extra cash the modem, business-like HFC way. So can you . . . todnyl Phone. or stop in for prompt ilcpcndnblc service! I A UPI. I Y A IL I mil nomiv iiiiimii in Need money! WI IICIWI PAVIINTI MONTH! . 9 snows sio.oo u -7 7 Ba,” to P" " sous u.oo is Give IIFC a call min 1 . . ruse ' ' ' today I vs m HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CANADA'S LAIBESY. MOST RECOMMENDED CONSUMER FINANCE COMPANY I. W. Chisholm, Manager I50 Orbit George 50., who 1. phone III! CHARLOTTITOWN, P.l.I.